Morphometric analysis of the effects of exenteration and enucleation on the development of third and sixth cranial nerves in the rat

Abstract
The effects on rat cranial nerve growth of removing various amounts of extraocular muscle was studied using morphometric techniques. Growth in the third cranial nerves was found to be severely retarded when most of the muscle tissue was removed. By contrast, removal of the eye alone, leaving extraocular muscles relatively intact, was found to have little or no effect on the subsequent growth of third and sixth cranial nerve fibers and of extraocular muscle fibers. This conclusion could be drawn only through the application of statistical methods which take into account several generally unrecognized facts: frequency distributions of axon circumference and myelin sheath thickness are highly variable from nerve to nerve even in normal rats, which often have more large fibers in left than in right nerves. The bimodal nature of peripheral nerve fiber distributions precludes the use of such parametric tests as the commonly and inappropriately used t‐test, but a non‐parametric test such as the Kolmogorov‐Smirnov test, extensively used in these studies, is inadequate for data comprising several sets of distributions to be compared. The application of the analysis of variance to some of the data and the merits of the procedure are discussed.